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Updated: Wednesday, July 27, 2022
 
 

Apache::TestUtil (3)

Name

Apache::TestUtil - Utility functions for writing tests

Synopsis

use Apache::Test;
use Apache::TestUtil;

ok t_cmp("foo", "foo", "sanity check");
t_write_file("filename", @content);
my $fh = t_open_file($filename);
t_mkdir("/foo/bar");
t_rmtree("/foo/bar");
t_is_equal($a, $b);

Description

User Contributed Perl Documentation                        Apache::TestUtil(3)



NAME
       Apache::TestUtil - Utility functions for writing tests

SYNOPSIS
         use Apache::Test;
         use Apache::TestUtil;

         ok t_cmp("foo", "foo", "sanity check");
         t_write_file("filename", @content);
         my $fh = t_open_file($filename);
         t_mkdir("/foo/bar");
         t_rmtree("/foo/bar");
         t_is_equal($a, $b);

DESCRIPTION
       "Apache::TestUtil" automatically exports a number of functions useful
       in writing tests.

       All the files and directories created using the functions from this
       package will be automatically destroyed at the end of the program
       execution (via END block). You should not use these functions other
       than from within tests which should cleanup all the created directories
       and files at the end of the test.

FUNCTIONS
       t_cmp()
             t_cmp($received, $expected, $comment);

           t_cmp() prints the values of $comment, $expected and $received.
           e.g.:

             t_cmp(1, 1, "1 == 1?");

           prints:

             # testing : 1 == 1?
             # expected: 1
             # received: 1

           then it returns the result of comparison of the $expected and the
           $received variables. Usually, the return value of this function is
           fed directly to the ok() function, like this:

             ok t_cmp(1, 1, "1 == 1?");

           the third argument ($comment) is optional, mostly useful for
           telling what the comparison is trying to do.

           It is valid to use "undef" as an expected value. Therefore:

             my $foo;
             t_cmp(undef, $foo, "undef == undef?");

           will return a true value.

           You can compare any two data-structures with t_cmp(). Just make
           sure that if you pass non-scalars, you have to pass their
           references. The datastructures can be deeply nested. For example
           you can compare:

             t_cmp({1 => [2..3,{5..8}], 4 => [5..6]},
                   {1 => [2..3,{5..8}], 4 => [5..6]},
                   "hash of array of hashes");

           You can also compare the second argument against the first as a
           regex. Use the "qr//" function in the second argument. For example:

             t_cmp("abcd", qr/^abc/, "regex compare");

           will do:

             "abcd" =~ /^abc/;

           This function is exported by default.

       t_filepath_cmp()
           This function is used to compare two filepaths via t_cmp().  For
           non-Win32, it simply uses t_cmp() for the comparison, but for
           Win32, Win32::GetLongPathName() is invoked to convert the first two
           arguments to their DOS long pathname. This is useful when there is
           a possibility the two paths being compared are not both represented
           by their long or short pathname.

           This function is exported by default.

       t_debug()
             t_debug("testing feature foo");
             t_debug("test", [1..3], 5, {a=>[1..5]});

           t_debug() prints out any datastructure while prepending "#" at the
           beginning of each line, to make the debug printouts comply with
           "Test::Harness"'s requirements. This function should be always used
           for debug prints, since if in the future the debug printing will
           change (e.g. redirected into a file) your tests won't need to be
           changed.

           the special global variable $Apache::TestUtil::DEBUG_OUTPUT can be
           used to redirect the output from t_debug() and related calls such
           as t_write_file().  for example, from a server-side test you would
           probably need to redirect it to STDERR:

             sub handler {
               plan $r, tests => 1;

               local $Apache::TestUtil::DEBUG_OUTPUT = \*STDERR;

               t_write_file('/tmp/foo', 'bar');
               ...
             }

           left to its own devices, t_debug() will collide with the standard
           HTTP protocol during server-side tests, resulting in a situation
           both confusing difficult to debug.  but STDOUT is left as the
           default, since you probably don't want debug output under normal
           circumstances unless running under verbose mode.

           This function is exported by default.

       t_write_test_lib()
             t_write_test_lib($filename, @lines)

           t_write_test_lib() creates a new file at $filename or overwrites
           the existing file with the content passed in @lines.  The file is
           created in a temporary directory which is added to @INC at test
           configuration time.  It is intended to be used for creating
           temporary packages for testing which can be modified at run time,
           see the Apache::Reload unit tests for an example.

       t_write_file()
             t_write_file($filename, @lines);

           t_write_file() creates a new file at $filename or overwrites the
           existing file with the content passed in @lines. If only the
           $filename is passed, an empty file will be created.

           If parent directories of $filename don't exist they will be
           automagically created.

           The generated file will be automatically deleted at the end of the
           program's execution.

           This function is exported by default.

       t_append_file()
             t_append_file($filename, @lines);

           t_append_file() is similar to t_write_file(), but it doesn't
           clobber existing files and appends @lines to the end of the file.
           If the file doesn't exist it will create it.

           If parent directories of $filename don't exist they will be
           automagically created.

           The generated file will be registered to be automatically deleted
           at the end of the program's execution, only if the file was created
           by t_append_file().

           This function is exported by default.

       t_write_shell_script()
             Apache::TestUtil::t_write_shell_script($filename, @lines);

           Similar to t_write_file() but creates a portable shell/batch
           script. The created filename is constructed from $filename and an
           appropriate extension automatically selected according to the
           platform the code is running under.

           It returns the extension of the created file.

       t_write_perl_script()
             Apache::TestUtil::t_write_perl_script($filename, @lines);

           Similar to t_write_file() but creates a executable Perl script with
           correctly set shebang line.

       t_open_file()
             my $fh = t_open_file($filename);

           t_open_file() opens a file $filename for writing and returns the
           file handle to the opened file.

           If parent directories of $filename don't exist they will be
           automagically created.

           The generated file will be automatically deleted at the end of the
           program's execution.

           This function is exported by default.

       t_mkdir()
             t_mkdir($dirname);

           t_mkdir() creates a directory $dirname. The operation will fail if
           the parent directory doesn't exist.

           If parent directories of $dirname don't exist they will be
           automagically created.

           The generated directory will be automatically deleted at the end of
           the program's execution.

           This function is exported by default.

       t_rmtree()
             t_rmtree(@dirs);

           t_rmtree() deletes the whole directories trees passed in @dirs.

           This function is exported by default.

       t_chown()
             Apache::TestUtil::t_chown($file);

           Change ownership of $file to the test's User/Group.  This function
           is noop on platforms where chown(2) is unsupported (e.g. Win32).

       t_is_equal()
             t_is_equal($a, $b);

           t_is_equal() compares any two datastructures and returns 1 if they
           are exactly the same, otherwise 0. The datastructures can be nested
           hashes, arrays, scalars, undefs or a combination of any of these.
           See t_cmp() for an example.

           If $b is a regex reference, the regex comparison "$a =~ $b" is
           performed. For example:

             t_is_equal($server_version, qr{^Apache});

           If comparing non-scalars make sure to pass the references to the
           datastructures.

           This function is exported by default.

       t_server_log_error_is_expected()
           If the handler's execution results in an error or a warning logged
           to the error_log file which is expected, it's a good idea to have a
           disclaimer printed before the error itself, so one can tell real
           problems with tests from expected errors. For example when testing
           how the package behaves under error conditions the error_log file
           might be loaded with errors, most of which are expected.

           For example if a handler is about to generate a run-time error,
           this function can be used as:

             use Apache::TestUtil;
             ...
             sub handler {
                 my $r = shift;
                 ...
                 t_server_log_error_is_expected();
                 die "failed because ...";
             }

           After running this handler the error_log file will include:

             *** The following error entry is expected and harmless ***
             [Tue Apr 01 14:00:21 2003] [error] failed because ...

           When more than one entry is expected, an optional numerical
           argument, indicating how many entries to expect, can be passed. For
           example:

             t_server_log_error_is_expected(2);

           will generate:

             *** The following 2 error entries are expected and harmless ***

           If the error is generated at compile time, the logging must be done
           in the BEGIN block at the very beginning of the file:

             BEGIN {
                 use Apache::TestUtil;
                 t_server_log_error_is_expected();
             }
             use DOES_NOT_exist;

           After attempting to run this handler the error_log file will
           include:

             *** The following error entry is expected and harmless ***
             [Tue Apr 01 14:04:49 2003] [error] Can't locate "DOES_NOT_exist.pm"
             in @INC (@INC contains: ...

           Also see "t_server_log_warn_is_expected()" which is similar but
           used for warnings.

           This function is exported by default.

       t_server_log_warn_is_expected()
           "t_server_log_warn_is_expected()" generates a disclaimer for
           expected warnings.

           See the explanation for "t_server_log_error_is_expected()" for more
           details.

           This function is exported by default.

       t_client_log_error_is_expected()
           "t_client_log_error_is_expected()" generates a disclaimer for
           expected errors. But in contrast to
           "t_server_log_error_is_expected()" called by the client side of the
           script.

           See the explanation for "t_server_log_error_is_expected()" for more
           details.

           For example the following client script fails to find the handler:

             use Apache::Test;
             use Apache::TestUtil;
             use Apache::TestRequest qw(GET);

             plan tests => 1;

             t_client_log_error_is_expected();
             my $url = "/error_document/cannot_be_found";
             my $res = GET($url);
             ok t_cmp(404, $res->code, "test 404");

           After running this test the error_log file will include an entry
           similar to the following snippet:

             *** The following error entry is expected and harmless ***
             [Tue Apr 01 14:02:55 2003] [error] [client 127.0.0.1]
             File does not exist: /tmp/test/t/htdocs/error

           When more than one entry is expected, an optional numerical
           argument, indicating how many entries to expect, can be passed. For
           example:

             t_client_log_error_is_expected(2);

           will generate:

             *** The following 2 error entries are expected and harmless ***

           This function is exported by default.

       t_client_log_warn_is_expected()
           "t_client_log_warn_is_expected()" generates a disclaimer for
           expected warnings on the client side.

           See the explanation for "t_client_log_error_is_expected()" for more
           details.

           This function is exported by default.

       t_catfile('a', 'b', 'c')
           This function is essentially "File::Spec->catfile", but on Win32
           will use "Win32::GetLongpathName()" to convert the result to a long
           path name (if the result is an absolute file).  The function is not
           exported by default.

       t_catfile_apache('a', 'b', 'c')
           This function is essentially "File::Spec::Unix->catfile", but on
           Win32 will use "Win32::GetLongpathName()" to convert the result to
           a long path name (if the result is an absolute file).  It is useful
           when comparing something to that returned by Apache, which uses a
           Unix-style specification with forward slashes for directory
           separators. The function is not exported by default.

       t_start_error_log_watch(), t_finish_error_log_watch()
           This pair of functions provides an easy interface for checking the
           presence or absense of any particular message or messages in the
           httpd error_log that were generated by the httpd daemon as part of
           a test suite.  It is likely, that you should proceed this with a
           call to one of the t_*_is_expected() functions.

             t_start_error_log_watch();
             do_it;
             ok grep {...} t_finish_error_log_watch();

           Another usage case could be a handler that emits some debugging
           messages to the error_log. Now, if this handler is called in a
           series of other test cases it can be hard to find the relevant
           messages manually. In such cases the following sequence in the test
           file may help:

             t_start_error_log_watch();
             GET '/this/or/that';
             t_debug t_finish_error_log_watch();

       t_start_file_watch()
             Apache::TestUtil::t_start_file_watch('access_log');

           This function is similar to "t_start_error_log_watch()" but allows
           for other files than "error_log" to be watched. It opens the given
           file and positions the file pointer at its end. Subsequent calls to
           "t_read_file_watch()" or "t_finish_file_watch()" will read lines
           that have been appended after this call.

           A file name can be passed as parameter. If omitted or undefined the
           "error_log" is opened. Relative file name are evaluated relative to
           the directory containing "error_log".

           If the specified file does not exist (yet) no error is returned. It
           is assumed that it will appear soon. In this case
           "t_{read,finish}_file_watch()" will open the file silently and read
           from the beginning.

       t_read_file_watch(), t_finish_file_watch()
             local $/ = "\n";
             $line1=Apache::TestUtil::t_read_file_watch('access_log');
             $line2=Apache::TestUtil::t_read_file_watch('access_log');

             @lines=Apache::TestUtil::t_finish_file_watch('access_log');

           This pair of functions reads the file opened by
           "t_start_error_log_watch()".

           As does the core "readline" function, they return one line if
           called in scalar context, otherwise all lines until end of file.

           Before calling "readline" these functions do not set $/ as does
           "t_finish_error_log_watch". So, if the file has for example a fixed
           record length use this:

             {
               local $/=\$record_length;
               @lines=t_finish_file_watch($name);
             }

       t_file_watch_for()
             @lines=Apache::TestUtil::t_file_watch_for('access_log',
                                                       qr/condition/,
                                                       $timeout);

           This function reads the file from the current position and looks
           for the first line that matches "qr/condition/". If no such line
           could be found until end of file the function pauses and retries
           until either such a line is found or the timeout (in seconds) is
           reached.

           In scalar or void context only the matching line is returned. In
           list context all read lines are returned with the matching one in
           last position.

           The function uses "\n" and end-of-line marker and waits for
           complete lines.

           The timeout although it can be specified with sub-second precision
           is not very accurate. It is simply multiplied by 10. The result is
           used as a maximum loop count. For the intented purpose this should
           be good enough.

           Use this function to check for logfile entries when you cannot be
           sure that they are already written when the test program reaches
           the point, for example to check for messages that are written in a
           PerlCleanupHandler or a PerlLogHandler.

            ok t_file_watch_for 'access_log', qr/expected log entry/, 2;

           This call reads the "access_log" and waits for maximum 2 seconds
           for the expected entry to appear.

AUTHOR
       Stas Bekman <stas@stason.org>, Torsten Frtsch
       <torsten.foertsch@gmx.net>


ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:


       +---------------+-----------------------------------------+
       |ATTRIBUTE TYPE |            ATTRIBUTE VALUE              |
       +---------------+-----------------------------------------+
       |Availability   | web/server/apache-24/module/apache-perl |
       +---------------+-----------------------------------------+
       |Stability      | Uncommitted                             |
       +---------------+-----------------------------------------+

SEE ALSO
       perl(1)



NOTES
       Source code for open source software components in Oracle Solaris can
       be found at https://www.oracle.com/downloads/opensource/solaris-source-
       code-downloads.html.

       This software was built from source available at
       https://github.com/oracle/solaris-userland.  The original community
       source was downloaded from
       https://www.apache.org/dist/perl/mod_perl-2.0.12.tar.gz.

       Further information about this software can be found on the open source
       community website at https://perl.apache.org/.



perl v5.32.0                      2022-01-30               Apache::TestUtil(3)